90 research outputs found

    The stochastic acceleration problem in two dimensions

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    We consider the motion of a particle in a two-dimensional spatially homogeneous mixing potential and show that its momentum converges to the Brownian motion on a circle. This complements the limit theorem of Kesten and Papanicolaou \cite{KP} proved in dimensions d≥3d\ge 3

    Anisotropic interactions in a first-order aggregation model : a proof of concept

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    We extend a well-studied ODE model for collective behaviour by considering anisotropic interactions among individuals. Anisotropy is modelled by limited sensorial perception of individuals, that depends on their current direction of motion. Consequently, the first-order model becomes implicit, and new analytical issues, such as non-uniqueness and jump discontinuities in velocities, are being raised. We study the well-posedness of the anisotropic model and discuss its modes of breakdown. To extend solutions beyond breakdown we propose a relaxation system containing a small parameter e, which can be interpreted as a small amount of inertia or response time. We show that the limit e ¿ 0 can be used as a jump criterion to select the physically correct velocities. In smooth regimes, the convergence of the relaxation system as e ¿ 0 is guaranteed by a theorem due to Tikhonov. We illustrate the results with numerical simulations in two dimensions. Keywords: Anisotropy; visual perception; aggregation models; implicit equations; regularization; relaxation time; uniqueness criteria; singular perturbation

    Wave-like solutions for nonlocal reaction-diffusion equations: A toy model

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    Traveling waves for the nonlocal Fisher Equation can exhibit much more complex behaviour than for the usual Fisher equation. A striking numerical observation is that a traveling wave with minimal speed can connect a dynamically unstable steady state 0 to a Turing unstable steady state 1, see [12]. This is proved in [1, 6] in the case where the speed is far from minimal, where we expect the wave to be monotone. Here we introduce a simplified nonlocal Fisher equation for which we can build simple analytical traveling wave solutions that exhibit various behaviours. These traveling waves, with minimal speed or not, can (i) connect monotonically 0 and 1, (ii) connect these two states non-monotonically, and (iii) connect 0 to a wavetrain around 1. The latter exist in a regime where time dynamics converges to another object observed in [3, 8]: a wave that connects 0 to a pulsating wave around 1. © 2013 EDP Sciences

    Casimir effect of electromagnetic field in D-dimensional spherically symmetric cavities

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    Eigenmodes of electromagnetic field with perfectly conducting or infinitely permeable conditions on the boundary of a D-dimensional spherically symmetric cavity is derived explicitly. It is shown that there are (D-2) polarizations for TE modes and one polarization for TM modes, giving rise to a total of (D-1) polarizations. In case of a D-dimensional ball, the eigenfrequencies of electromagnetic field with perfectly conducting boundary condition coincides with the eigenfrequencies of gauge one-forms with relative boundary condition; whereas the eigenfrequencies of electromagnetic field with infinitely permeable boundary condition coincides with the eigenfrequencies of gauge one-forms with absolute boundary condition. Casimir energy for a D-dimensional spherical shell configuration is computed using both cut-off regularization and zeta regularization. For a double spherical shell configuration, it is shown that the Casimir energy can be written as a sum of the single spherical shell contributions and an interacting term, and the latter is free of divergence. The interacting term always gives rise to an attractive force between the two spherical shells. Its leading term is the Casimir force acting between two parallel plates of the same area, as expected by proximity force approximation.Comment: 28 page

    Kinetic Limit for Wave Propagation in a Random Medium

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    We study crystal dynamics in the harmonic approximation. The atomic masses are weakly disordered, in the sense that their deviation from uniformity is of order epsilon^(1/2). The dispersion relation is assumed to be a Morse function and to suppress crossed recollisions. We then prove that in the limit epsilon to 0 the disorder averaged Wigner function on the kinetic scale, time and space of order epsilon^(-1), is governed by a linear Boltzmann equation.Comment: 71 pages, 3 figure
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